Medigap under 65: a half-closed door, and the one that reopens
Federal law guarantees Medigap open enrollment only at 65 — under-65 disability beneficiaries get whatever their state requires, which ranges from full access to limited plans at steep premiums to nothing at all. The practical alternatives are Medicare Advantage's capped costs, the VA as a backstop, and the full guaranteed-issue reset that arrives at 65.
Why the door is half-closed
The federal Medigap guarantee — six months of buy-anything, no-underwriting open enrollment — keys off turning 65 with Part B. Congress never extended it to the under-65 disability population, so the market falls to state law. The result is a patchwork: a majority of states require insurers to offer something to under-65 beneficiaries, but "something" varies — sometimes every plan letter, sometimes only Plan A or a short list, sometimes only during limited windows. A minority of states require nothing, leaving carriers free to decline under-65 applicants entirely. And where policies are offered, premiums routinely run two to three times the 65-year-old rate, because the under-65 pool skews high-cost.
This site stays state-general on purpose — the map changes, and your state's SHIP office or a licensed agent can give you the current local answer in minutes. What's universal is the decision framework around it.
The honest options when Medigap is scarce or priced out
| Path | What it caps | The trade |
|---|---|---|
| Medicare Advantage | In-network costs at ≤$9,250 (2026) | Networks and prior authorization — but under-65 access is guaranteed at standard pricing, which Medigap can't say |
| Original Medicare + VA only | VA-side costs only; civilian 20% uncapped | The PG1 logic, accepted deliberately — strongest where a full-service VA facility anchors your care |
| Original Medicare + employer/retiree plan | Per the plan | Medically retired members and working spouses sometimes hold this — it can outperform everything else on this table |
| Medicaid / Medicare Savings Programs | Premiums and cost-sharing, by tier | Income-tested — and worth checking, since SSDI-only income often qualifies for QMB or SLMB |
For TFL and CHAMPVA households, none of this applies — the wraparound already does Medigap's job, free, at any age.
The age-65 reset: the fact that reframes everything
When an under-65 Medicare beneficiary turns 65, the law treats them as newly eligible: a fresh six-month Medigap open enrollment opens with Part B at 65, guaranteed-issue, every plan letter, standard age-65 pricing — health history irrelevant. That converts the under-65 years into a bridge problem rather than a forever problem: pick the least-bad capped option now (often MA), calendar the 65th birthday, and execute the permanent decision inside the protected window. The Medigap guide covers that destination.
A few states add their own guaranteed-issue moments (birthday rules, annual switches), and certain federal situations — like an MA plan leaving your area — create under-65 guaranteed-issue rights into specific Medigap plans where sold. Rare, state-specific, and exactly the kind of detail to confirm locally before assuming.
The under-65 Medigap map is fifty different answers. An agent licensed in your state can tell you in one call which plans must sell to you, at what price, and whether MA beats them all.
Check My State's RulesOr compare plans yourself at PlanMatch’s comparison tool, or contact Medicare.gov / 1-800-MEDICARE.
Frequently asked questions
Can I buy Medigap under 65 on disability Medicare?
Why are under-65 Medigap premiums so high?
Do I get a real Medigap window at 65 if I'm already on Medicare?
Is Medicare Advantage easier to get under 65?
You earned these benefits. Make them work together.
Whether you keep exactly what you have or add Medicare coverage alongside it, the right answer depends on your health, budget, and how you like to get care.
No cost, no obligation. You can also get help from Medicare.gov, 1-800-MEDICARE (TTY 1-877-486-2048), or your local SHIP office.